When you click on "Add this event to my calendar" your browser will download an ics file.

Microsoft Outlook: Download the file, then you may be able to click on "Save & Close" to save it to your calendar. If that doesn't work go into Outlook, click on the File tab, then on Open, then Import. Select "Import an iCalendar (.ic or vCalendar file (.vcs)" then click on Next. Find the .ics file and click on OK.

Google Calendar: download the file, then go into your calendar. On the right where it says "Other calendars" click on the arrow icon and then click on Import calendar. Click on Browse and select the .ics file, then click on Import.

Apple Calendar: download the file, then you can either drag it to Calendar or import the file by going to File > Import > Import and choosing the .ics file.

Angus is a KTRR/ARUK career development fellow with a group within the Centre for OA pathogenesis at the Kennedy Institute, University of Oxford.

It has now become evident that the machinery associated with the primary cilium is critical to metazoan life and the development of multiple mammalian organ systems. The ciliopathies are defining the ciliome, unveiling its influence over the musculoskeletal system development. We are exploring its roles in adult tissues and the disease context.

Audience - talk mostly about the cytokine work we are doing in context of inflammatory biology but then move talk towards OA work too so some basic cell biology, signalling and microscopy, bit of mouse and maybe some human translational work.